68 dead fish found after contaminated water discharge from Yukon mine disaster site
WHITEHORSE — The federal government has ordered the company that owns the Eagle Gold mine in Yukon to build barriers to protect fish from cyanide-contaminated water after 68 dead fish were found following a discharge of treated water from the site of a massive ore slide.
Cameron Sinclair, a Yukon government fisheries biologist, said at an update Friday that the fish were discovered last week by the mine’s owner, Victoria Gold, and they are believed to have died after a release from the mine’s water treatment plant.
He said some of the fish were Arctic Graylings and some were Sculpins, and the company has since frozen the dead specimens “to store for later analysis.”
Sinclair said the company stopped discharging treated water after finding the fish kill, and the federal Fisheries Department has now ordered the company to build seven fish barriers in Haggart Creek to create a “no go zone for fish.”

